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Apple releases iOS 6

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 12.22

iOS 6 is upon us. Apple on Wednesday, as promised, released the new version of the operating system that powers the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch.

You can upgrade to iOS 6 in a couple of ways. Option one is to upgrade from your device itself: Launch the Settings app, tap General, tap Software Update, and then follow the on-screen prompts to download and install the software. Option two is the old, tethered approach: Connect your iOS device to iTunes with a USB cable, and use your computer to download and install the software update.

iOS 6 contains a variety of new, hallmark features—but they won't all necessarily work on your device; Wednesday's release marks perhaps the most diverse iOS release to date, in terms of which features work on which devices.

Facebook integration—accessible via Siri on compatible devices—is one of the new features in iOS 6.

You'll need an iPad 2 or newer, an iPhone 3GS or newer, or a third-generation iPod touch or newer to upgrade to iOS 6—the original iPad and older iPhones and iPod touches aren't eligible. The full feature list of upgrades in iOS 6 includes an overhauled Maps app complete with built-in turn-by-turn navigation, new Siri functionality like support for launching apps and getting movie and sports information, systemwide Facebook integration akin to iOS 5's Twitter integration, and a slew of updates to existing, built-in apps: shared Photo Streams, Panorama photography mode, FaceTime over cellular, and updates to Mail, Safari, the App Store, Phone, and more.

Of course, if you upgrade to iOS 6 from an iPhone 3GS, you'll miss out on turn-by-turn navigation and the new flyover mode in Maps, shared Photo Streams, FaceTime, Siri, Panorama, and Safari's new Offline Reading List. The iPhone 4 gains access to shared Photo Streams and Offline Reading List, but misses out on the turn-by-turn, FlyOver, FaceTime over cellular, and Siri.

The iPhone 4S and the iPhone 5 gain access to all of iOS 6's new features. The iPad 2 lacks Siri; the third-generation iPad gains access to that voice-recognition assistant in iOS 6. Panorama is limited to the iPhone 4S and iPhone 5, and doesn't work on any iPad. FaceTime over cellular works on the third-generation iPad, but not the iPad 2.

Got all that?

In short: The newer your iOS device, the more iOS 6 features it will support—a statement not all that surprising.

iOS 6 is free.

Macworld will post our complete review of iOS 6, along with feature-by-feature guides, over the days ahead. You can read our iOS 6 FAQ now.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.macworld.com/article/2010080/apple-releases-ios-6.html
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HTC announces Windows Phone 8X and 8S, coming in November

With Microsoft's blessing, HTC has announced the Windows Phone 8X and Windows Phone 8S, two new smartphones coming in November.

Of the pair, HTC's Windows Phone 8X is the flagship. It has a 4.3-inch, 720p display, a 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processor, 1 GB of RAM and 16 GB of internal storage, but no MicroSD slot. The phone also supports NFC for the wallet features Microsoft is cooking up in Windows Phone 8 .

For the phone's 8-megapixel, f/2.0 aperture rear-facing camera, HTC is bringing along the ImageSense sensor found in the company's high-end Android handsets. The 2.1-megapixel front-facing camera is no slouch either, with support for 1080p video chat and an 88-degree wide-angle lens that can get four people in the frame at once.

The Windows Phone 8X takes some design cues from Nokia, with a polycarbonate shell in a variety of colors to match the software's Live Tiles, surrounding a black bezel covered in Gorilla Glass. The phones look slim, but there's no word on exact measurements just yet.

The HTC Windows Phone 8S is a mid-range device with a 4-inch, 800-by-480 resolution display. Other specs include a 1 GHz dual-core processor Snapdragon S4 processor, 512 MB of RAM, 4 GB of storage, a MicroSD card slot and a 5-megapixel rear-facing camera and a front-facing camera. It does not support NFC. The 8S phones have a two-tone polycarbonate body, with darker colors around most of the shell, and a bit of pop around the bottom where the Windows Phone buttons reside.

Both devices support Beats Audio software, but only the 8X has additional amplifiers inside, The Verge reports.

Though HTC isn't a stranger to Windows Phone, the company appears to have put some extra effort behind these phones, and has earned some special attention from Microsoft. In a blog post, Microsoft's Terry Myerson noted that these are the first devices with "Windows Phone" in the name. He said HTC CEO Peter Chou saw Microsoft's plans for Windows Phone 8 and asked his designers to create a device that matched the software's design and personality. "I think they achieved that and more," Myerson said.

That type of love from Microsoft has previously been reserved for Nokia, but HTC already has one important element that Nokia's new Lumia phones don't: commitments from wireless carriers. AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile will all sell the Windows Phone 8X and 8S. In total, the phones will be available on over 150 carriers across 50 countries starting in November.

We'll have to wait a bit longer for an exact release date and pricing, but broad carrier support is exactly what Windows Phone needs to get some traction in the market.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.techhive.com/article/2010088/htc-announces-windows-phone-8x-and-8s-coming-in-november.html
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Dell unveils Windows 8 Latitude tablet and Ultrabook for business

Dell revealed its Windows 8 game plan Wednesday announcing new gear ranging from a Latitude tablet, Ultrabook, and an all-in-one PC. Noticeably absent from the lineup is a tablet and laptop hybrid, something other leading PC makers such as Acer, Asus, and Lenovo have announced.

Pricing and ship dates for the new gear will be revealed October 26 with the launch of Windows 8, Dell says.

Dell's Windows 8 tablet

Dell's most interesting new product is the Latitude 10 tablet. The Latitude 10 is a 10.1-inch Windows 8 tablet with a resolution of 1366 by 768 pixels. It runs on Intel's Atom system-on-a-chip processor with 2GB of RAM, up to 128GB of flash storage, as well as front and back camera.

Dell says it is targeting the tablet at education, healthcare and government markets, and includes a card reader and fingerprint reader. A separate dock will also be available, but it's not an attachable keyboard dock as seen with other Windows 8 tablet hybrids.

Windows 8 Dell Ultrabook

Dell's announced Latitude 6430u "durable" 14-inch Ultrabook is 20mm thin(.9 inches) and weighs just 3.7 pounds. Dell says it is 33 percent slimmer and 16 percent lighter than Dell's current 14-inch Latitude notebook. It runs on Intel Core i3 to Core 17 processors with up to 8GB or RAM and is designed to meet military testing, which means you can add useful extras such as a spill-resistant keyboard or a free-fall hard disk sensor for preventing data loss.

To fight its Ultrabook from feeling flimsy, Dell is boasting its 6430u was "Designed to meet MIL-STD-810G testing, a United States Military test standard where systems are subjected to the harshest conditions."

Dell's all-in-one business PC

Third in Dell's Windows 8 business lineup is the OptiPlex 9010 23-inch all-in-one PC using Intel's third-generation Core processors. The OptiPlex also offers options for touchscreen functionality and fixed or rotating webcams for various business use scenarios.

Windows 8 hardware parade

PC manufactures have already previewed some of their Windows 8 devices, including tablets and ultrabooks. Acer, Asus, Lenovo, Fujitsu and Samsung showed several Windows 8 tablets featuring clamshell docks that turn them into full-fledged laptops using the dual touch and traditional interface of Windows 8.

Intel will hold an event on September 27 alongside all major PC manufacturers, where it is expected that pricing and availability details will be clearer for the wide range of Windows 8 devices previewed so far.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2010082/dell-unveils-windows-8-latitude-tablet-and-ultrabook-for-business.html
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Apple, ebook publishers look to settle EU antitrust dispute

Apple and four major ebook publishers have offered retailers such as Amazon.com the option to set their own prices for ebooks for the next two years in a bid to end an antitrust investigation in the European Union.

The European Commission launched the investigation into allegations of cartel price-fixing by Harper Collins, Hachette Livre, Simon & Schuster, Penguin, Macmillan and Apple last December.

The publishers are accused of colluding with Apple to fix the price of ebooks, forcing up prices for consumers and attempting to squeeze rivals such as Amazon out of the market. The case hinges on so-called "agency pricing", which allows more control by publishers over retail prices, in particular an unusual "most favored nation" (MFN) clause.

Apple, Harper Collins, Hachette Livre, Simon & Schuster and Macmillan have all offered to terminate existing agency agreements and refrain from adopting price MFN clauses for five years. Penguin has not offered any commitments and an investigation into its conduct is ongoing.

In addition, retailers would be free to set the retail price of ebooks, offering whatever discounts or promotions they wish, for a two-year period, so long as the total value of discounts does not exceed the total annual amount of commission that the retailer receives from the publisher, reported the E.U.'s Official Journal on Wednesday.

This could mean lower prices for consumers thanks to increased competition.

However the Commission is asking competitors, retailers and customers to give their opinion on the proposed remedies. Because the companies offered these solutions themselves, the Commission can then make them legally binding under the E.U.'s Antitrust Regulation, without having to conclude that an infringement of E.U. antitrust rules definitely took place. If a company then breaks its commitments, the Commission can impose a fine of up to 10 percent of its annual worldwide turnover.

Interested parties have a month to provide feedback on the proposals.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.macworld.com/article/2010086/apple-e-book-publishers-look-to-settle-eu-antitrust-dispute.html
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Optimus G could be the comeback that LG needs

LG's Optimus G is more than just another hot Android phone, it may also be the last hurrah of a company slowly being edged out of the mobile space.

Market research firm IDC says that LG's mobile division has lost close to $1 billion in the last two years, and the company is now fifth behind Chinese telecom firm ZTE in global mobile market share.

Enter the Optimus G, announced Wednesday and slated for a launch later this year. On paper, LG's smartphone looks like it will be able to hold its own against the Nokia Lumias and Samsung Galaxy S IIIs of the world: The phone will have a 13-megapixel camera, a 4.7-inch HD IPS display, and will be powered by a quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processor.

However, good specs don't always translate into good performance, and previous high-end LG phones have had critical bugs that kept them from functioning properly. LG's G2x, for example, was the first dual-core phone in the United States and was pulled from store shelves after only a few short weeks due to severe glitches that would cause the phone to restart itself multiple times a day.

If LG is betting it all on the Optimus G, the company is going to have to make sure to tighten all the screws and iron out most (if not all) of the phone's quirks before it goes on sale, lest it suffer the same fate as the G2x.

The Windows Phone option

While LG has had bad luck with its Android devices, it may find success should it branch out to Windows Phone 8. (The Optimus G is an Android phone, shipping with Android 4.0 and not the newer 4.1 version of the mobile OS.) Other than Nokia, very few companies are making the big push for Microsoft's mobile OS, leaving a lot of room for newcomers looking to provide a different kind of mobile experience to smartphone owners. If LG were to throw itself head-first into the Windows Phone scene, it could push Nokia and others into creating more high-powered WP phones and help make the platform more competitive against the likes of iOS and Android.

A Windows Phone-centric LG could also help with the creation of more budget Windows Phone devices (similar to LG's line of budget Optimus Android phones), which would help get Windows Phone into the hands of more people.

LG needs to stay in the game

Few people shed tears about whether or not a company succeeds. But it would be a loss if LG were to drop out of the mobile space. Competition is good, and LG in partcular has been good at spurring other mobile phone makers to do better.

Take the G2x. Yes, it was a buggy mess of a phone, but it pushed other handset makers into getting their dual-core devices into the United States much faster than they might have otherwise. The company has dabbled in everything from tablets to phablets; though it has never had a runaway success, LG is still keeping other companies on their toes.

The Optimus G may be LG's last stand when it comes to high-end Android phones (or phones in general for that matter), so here's hoping that the phone is a good one.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.techhive.com/article/2010092/optimus-g-could-be-the-comeback-that-lg-needs.html
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Will you be more secure if you abandon Internet Explorer?

The German government is urging people to abandon Internet Explorer to avoid zero-day attacks currently circulating in the wild. Microsoft is scrambling to develop a patch to address the problem. The dirty secret, though, is the attack relies on Java being present, so Java—not Internet Explorer—is the Achilles heel of this equation.

Java was recently the target of attacks against its own zero-day vulnerabilities. However, it turned out that the vulnerabilities weren't all that "zero-day." Security researchers had discovered them and reported them to Oracle months earlier, but Oracle didn't prioritize fixing the flaws until attackers also discovered them and started exploiting them.

In Oracle's case, the Java patch created new problems. Oracle addressed the vulnerabilities being targeted by the zero-day attacks, but included a different vulnerability it was already aware of, but hadn't yet developed a patch for.

Java was also at the heart of the Flashback malware that plagued Mac OS X users earlier this year. In Oracle's defense, it had developed and released a patch for the targeted vulnerability, but because Apple embeds its own version of Java in its OS the ball was in Apple's court to roll out the update, and it was slow in doing so.

The problem isn't only or always Java, either. Adobe Flash, Adobe Reader, and other virtually ubiquitous Adobe tools are also frequently targeted in exploits and malware attacks. Adobe recently patched critical flaws in Adobe Flash, and because Microsoft embedded Flash in Internet Explorer 10 it's Microsoft's job to patch it. We're still waiting for that update, so those using Windows 8 and Internet Explorer 10 remain vulnerable.

That doesn't mean operating system or browser vendors are off the hook—particularly Microsoft. Internet Explorer provides plenty of opportunity for attackers, and it has been a popular target for exploits and malware. But, as Microsoft and other browser developers step up their game and create stronger, more secure browsers, attackers start poking around for the next weak spot, and that weak spot is often a third-party application.

Java and Adobe tools make headlines because they're found almost universally on both Windows and Mac PCs, and even on Linux and many mobile devices. Java and Adobe are possibly the least of your worries, though, because they make headlines. What about the other obscure third-party apps, add-ons, and extensions you use with your browser?

Oracle and Java may not be perfect, but at least they support their products and continue to develop patches and updates. But many third-party browser tools are developed by individuals in their spare time. They may lack basic secure coding principles in the first place, and they're much less likely to be maintained and patched if flaws are found.

Should you abandon Internet Explorer? Probably not.

You're welcome to adopt Chrome or Firefox, or some other browser of your choice. Just don't expect that to be a silver bullet solution that magically makes you invulnerable. No matter what browser you choose, you will still have to be diligent about keeping it up to date and vigilant about making sure the applications and add-ons you use with it don't have flaws that expose you to attacks.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2010090/will-you-be-more-secure-if-you-abandon-internet-explorer.html
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Asus RT-AC66U router review: The best 802.11ac router on the market, so far

Asus currently builds the best consumer-oriented 802.11n router—the RT-N66U Dual-Band Wireless N900, which I used as a reference device to compare new 802.11ac routers against. After testing the company's $200 RT-AC66U, I believe that Asus also markets the best 802.11ac router currently available, too, though the offerings from several other manufacturers come close.

The new RT-AC66U and the older RT-N66U look almost identical: Bucking the industry trend of hiding antennas inside the enclosure, both of these routers provide three removable and upgradable dipole antennas that you can reposition to deliver the best wireless performance. They're mounted to the exterior of a satin-black, diamond-plate-finish plastic enclosure. The routers can lie flat, sit semivertically on the provided stand, or be mounted to the wall.

The RT-AC66U provides two USB 2.0 ports, so you can attach both a USB hard drive and a USB printer, and then share the devices over the network. I didn't evaluate try to connect a printer to the router's USB port, but the RT-AC66U was very fast at transferring files to and from an attached 500MB 2.5-inch USB hard drive. Asus is working on a new Android and iOS app called AiCloud that will enable users to sync, access, and store data on an attached hard drive, using a multitude of devices over the Internet. Update: Asus has since released new firmware that enables AiCloud. If you've purchased an RT-AC66U, you can download the firmware here. According to Asus, AiCloud will also allow you to access any PC on your wired or wireless network from the Internet without the need to install client software on each machine. I have not evaluated this new firmware.

Whether you plan to use your router to stream media, to host files, or to download files using P2P services such as BitTorrent, the RT-AC66U has you covered. It offers DLNA and iTunes servers for video and music, ftp and Samba servers for file hosting, a VPN pass-through for secure remote network access, and a program called Download Master for downloading Torrent files to an attached storage device, without requiring a host PC.

This dual-band router can run a 450-mbps 802.11n network on the 2.4GHz frequency band and a 1.3-gbps 802.11ac network on the 5GHz frequency band simultaneously. The RT-AC66U I tested arrived from the factory with its 5GHz radio configured to deliver 80MHz of wireless bandwidth (draft 802.11ac).

Benchmarking 5GHz 802.11ac performance

I used an AVADirect laptop equipped with a 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-3210M CPU, 4GB of memory, and an integrated Intel Centrino Ultimate-N 6300 Wi-Fi adapter to run my benchmark tests. The Ultimate-N 6300 can send and receive three simultaneous 150-mbps spatial streams (450 mbps in total); most adapters are limited to handling two (300 mbps in total). This was all the streaming I needed to evaluate the RT-AC66U's 802.11n performance (on both the 2.4- and 5GHz frequency bands). To measure the router's 802.11ac performance on the 5GHz frequency band, I configured a second RT-AC66U as a media bridge and connected that to the AVADirect's ethernet port.

To test the router, I positioned the client successively at five spots inside and outside a 2800-square-foot, ranch-style home (distances from the router are noted in each chart below). I used the open-source IPERF benchmark (and the JPERF Java graphical front end designed for it). To measure the router's downlink TCP throughput, I set up the laptop as a server and used a desktop PC hard-wired to the router as the client.

At close range, with the client 9 feet away from the router and in the same room, the RT-AC66U was more than twice as fast as the reference 802.11n router, delivering TCP throughput of 466 mbps. This was the second-highest performance of the five 802.11ac routers I tested at this location (the Netgear R6300 was slightly faster).

I was surprised to discover that the RT-AC66U performed even better when I moved the client into the kitchen, 20 feet away from the router with one wall in between. I suspect that the media bridge was being oversaturated at the closer proximity, though the orientation of the media bridge is another variable. In the bedroom, the bridge faced the router: In the kitchen, it was perpendicular to the router. Whatever the cause, the RT-AC66U's TCP throughput jumped to a staggering 525 mbps at this location—the fastest performance in the field by a wide margin.

The next two benchmark runs took place inside my home theater. This is a room-within-a-room design, with four walls of 2-by-4 framing and drywall inside four walls of 2-by-6 framing and drywall, with about 6 inches of dead air and fiberglass insulation separating them. My intent was to optimize the room's acoustics, not to build a Faraday cage, but many lesser routers and other wireless devices have had trouble penetrating it. However, none of the 802.11ac routers I tested had any difficulty reaching the client in this room, and three of them—including the RT-AC66U—sustained TCP throughput at more than twice the rate of the reference 802.11n router. As you can see from the chart below, the Asus was the fastest of them all, at 192 mpbs.

Since many people will want to connect the gear in their home entertainment system to an 802.11ac network, I decided to measure TCP throughput with the media bridge inside the built-in equipment cabinet in my home theater (the floor-to-ceiling, wall-to-wall cabinet is constructed from cabinet-grade plywood, including the back). The RT-AC66U's TCP throughput dropped by just a few megabits per second in this scenario. In fact, I found that I could wirelessly mount and stream a Blu-ray ISO image of the movie Spiderman 3 from a Windows Home Server 2011 machine in my home office to a home theater PC in the entertainment center, including its high-definition soundtrack.

The RT-AC66U's performance dropped off only slightly when I moved the client and the media bridge to the first of my two outdoor locations, an exterior patio enclosed by three walls and one half wall with glass windows. In the real world, I doubt that anyone would try to set up a media bridge outdoors because dragging the bridge and finding an outlet (and likely an extension cord) are too inconvenient. But I wanted to see what kind of range the RT-AC66U would deliver, and I wasn't disappointed. It was the second fastest (behind Netgear's R6300) among the five routers I tested.

The RT-AC66U's performance was even more impressive when I moved the client and bridge out to a picnic table completely outside my house. At this location, the router and client were 75 feet apart and separated by three insulated interior walls, and one insulated exterior wall clad on one side with fiber-cement lapboard. Under these conditions, the reference 802.11n router delivered TCP throughput of just 30.2 mpbs, but the RT-AC66U roared along at a whopping 125 mbps. The only thing more surprising that the number is the fact that the Asus finished in second place at this location, bested by the D-Link DIR-865L, which delivered 152 mbps.

Benchmarking 2.4GHz 802.11n performance

Though you can ostensibly set the router's firmware to forcibly bond two 20MHz channels within the 2.4GHz frequency band to create a single channel with 40MHz of bandwidth, the RT-AC66U automatically backed down to using a single channel when it detected other 2.4GHz wireless networks operating nearby (nevertheless, the router's firmware stubbornly indicated that it was operating a 40-MHz channel).

I assume that this behavior is in preparation for eventual Wi-Fi Alliance certification, since the trade group requires "good-neighbor" behavior of this type, though the Wi-Fi Alliance has not yet implemented a certification program for 802.11ac routers. In my opinion, the router was unnecessarily deferential. My home sits a on a 10-acre lot, and my neighbors' routers are far away. Usually, my network client adapters don't even indicate that the neighboring routers are there at all.

On my 2.4GHz 802.11n benchmark tests, the RT-AC66U performed slightly below the average marks for all five 802.11ac routers, especially at close range (in the bedroom and kitchen tests).

When the distance between the router and the client was greatest, however, the RT-AC66U bested the rest of the field, with the exception of its reference-point cousin, the RT-N66U. In the test charted below, the client and the router were 75 feet apart.

Benchmarking hardwired ethernet performance

The RT-AC66U's four-port gigabit ethernet switch performed as expected, delivering TCP throughput of 943 mbps.


To evaluate the RT-AC66U's performance as a network-attached storage device, I connected a 500GB Western Digital My Passport USB drive to one of the router's USB ports. I used a stopwatch to time how long it took the unit to copy a few files from a PC to the drive over the network (a write test), and then I copied a few files from the USB drive to the networked PC over the network (a read test). The PC was hardwired to the network.

I created a large-file test by ripping a DVD (Quentin Tarantino's From Dusk to Dawn) to the PC's hard drive. Copying this 4.29GB file from the PC to the portable hard drive required 289.7 seconds (about 4 minutes, 50 seconds). This was the fastest time of the five 802.ac routers I tested, but it was slightly slower than the reference RT-N66U 802.11n router. The D-Link and Belkin routers were off the chart here, with scores of 1233 and 2211 seconds, respectively. I couldn't benchmark the Buffalo WZR-D1800H at all on this measure, because the router didn't recognize my NTFS-formatted hard drive.

Surprisingly, the RT-AC66U was slower at copying (reading) the large file from the USB drive than it was at writing to the drive. On the other hand, as the chart below makes clear, the two Asus routers were faster than most of the rest of the field on this measure.

Unless you rip a lot of movies from DVD or Blu-ray discs, you'll rarely move a single large file to a hard drive attached to your router. A more common task is to move batches of small files back and forth across your network. To evaluate each router's performance in this scenario, I created a single folder containing 595MB of small files (subfolders containing music, graphics, photos, documents, spreadsheets, and so on).

On this task, the RT-AC66U delivered the fastest write performance of any of the 802.11ac routers I tested; it was bested only by the Asus 802.11n router I used as a reference point.

When it came to retrieving the batch of small files from an attached hard drive, none of the routers were especially fast. The RT-AC66U took third place, behind the reference RT-N66U router and Netgear's R6300 802.11ac router.

Bottom line

Several of the new 802.11ac routers turned in excellent performance on one test or another, but the Asus RT-AC66U was the best overall. It delivered the top benchmark scores performance on two of my 802.11ac wireless tests, two of my 802.11n wireless tests, and nearly all of my hardwired tests (it was part of a three-way tie for first in this category).

The router is feature-rich, too, with DLNA compatibility for home entertainment use, a built-in iTunes server, an integrated BitTorrent client, and more. And Asus has produced an attractive, user-friendly front-end for tweaking its firmware. I wish that more router manufacturers would follow Asus's example of using external antennas that allow users to fine-tune range and performance.

If you're ready to take the plunge into 802.11ac Draft 2.0 and you don't mind paying top dollar, this is the router to buy.

Note: This review is part of a roundup. Click here to read the introduction to the story and find links to the other 802.11ac routers reviewed at the same time.

Update: This story was updated on September 13 to inform readers that Asus has now released the firmware required to make use of its AiCloud tool.

20 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/262149/asus_rt_ac66u_the_best_802_11ac_router_on_the_market_so_far.html
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Samsung Galaxy Note II hits U.S. mid-November

If you're a fan of styluses and giant screens, you'll be happy to learn that the Galaxy Note II—Samsung's phone/tablet hybrid—will be making its way to the United States sometime mid-November. The phone will be available through AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, and U.S. Cellular on launch, though we'll have to wait on pricing and exact release dates.

The U.S. version of the Note II will be pretty much identical to the international model that was announced at the IFA trade show less than a month ago. The Note II sports a gigantic 5.55-inch Super AMOLED Plus display, ships with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, is LTE compatible, and comes with a re-designed S Pen stylus that is easier to hold. Oh, and it will be powered by a quad-core Samsung Exynos processor, making it one of the first quad-core smartphones to make it to the States.

I managed to get some hands-on time with the Note II earlier this month and was impressed with what I saw: The phone was fast and felt well-built, even if I did have some difficulty using it one-handed. The new S Pen didn't feel as flimsy as the one that came with the original Note, and I found it much easier to write with. There were several cool new pen-related features too, such as the ability to hover the pen over certain items to get a preview of that item's contents.

The Note II definitely won't appeal to everyone, but I can see it coming in handy for those times when you want to quickly jot down an idea or phone number and don't happen to have a pen and paper handy. Remember to check back here for more Note II-related news, as well as a full review of the phone in the coming weeks.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.techhive.com/article/2010068/samsung-galaxy-note-ii-hits-u-s-mid-november.html
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Internet Archive collects, streams TV news archives

internet archive

Most people use the Internet Archive to find out what the Web once looked like.

But now the site has an additional function: TV News Search & Borrow, which stores a collection of 1000 national news shows with some 350,000 individual programs dating back to 2009. The site will continue to add new programs 24 hours after they air.

The new project is meant to "help the American voter to better be able to examine candidates and issues" before the November presidential election, Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle told the New York Times. Fox, CBS, PBS, CNN, and other national news networks will be represented, as will local newscasts from stations in Washington, D.C. and San Francisco.

brewster kahleBrewster Kahle

Candidates are often able to disavow previous statements, but the Internet Archive's collection is preserving speeches for posterity. Want to know what President Barack Obama or Republican candidate Mitt Romney said three years ago compared to what they're saying today? Search the collection using key words and dates.

Kahle told the Times that the site uses closed-captioning technology to collect text and render the programs searchable. Kahle said he plans to eventually archive all news shows throughout television history, but closed-captioning has only been in use since 2002, which means making those programs searchable will be more challenging.

The $12 million TV News Search & Borrow program was funded in part by Kahle with grants from the Library of Congress, the National Archives and other foundations, according to the Times.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.techhive.com/article/2010062/internet-archive-collects-streams-tv-news-archives.html
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Microsoft adds recycle bin to SkyDrive, plus other updates aimed at students

In an effort to further appeal to students, Microsoft Wednesday announced updates to its SkyDrive cloud storage service including a recycle bin for the cloud.

The new features are intended to streamline group projects and provide a safety net for work in progress, addressing concerns submitted by students, says SkyDrive Group Program Manager Omar Shahine in a blog posting.

The SkyDrive recycle bin stores deleted files for at least three days, just in case a classmate accidentally trashes an important document from the cloud. If the deleted docs take up more than 10 percent of your storage limit, they will be removed after three days. The recycle bin update is being rolled out now and will be available to all users within the next 24 hours.

microsoft skydriveBrowse the recycle bin in thumbnail or details view, and restore items to their original location.

Students are a key market for SkyDrive, Shahine said, which is why Microsoft offers tips on how students can best use SkyDrive for cloud storage and also why the company earlier this year hosted a collaboration challenge for students using SkyDrive to compete in college business plan competitions.

Students also asked for survey tools within Excel, Shahine said in his post. The program will soon allow people to create surveys with multiple question and response options that can then be shared with others from within Excel. Shahine said the update is in development and will soon be available in SkyDrive.

microsoft skydriveSurveys can be created using an Excel template of that handles a variety of question and response formats.

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2010063/microsoft-adds-recycle-bin-to-skydrive-plus-other-updates-aimed-at-students.html
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